Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Purdue owners to appear before Congress

- Geoff Mulvihill

Two members of the family that owns OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma agreed to appear this week before a congressio­nal committee investigat­ing the family and the company’s role in the national opioid addiction and overdose epidemic.

Thursday’s hearing before the House Oversight Committee will be the first time in years that any member of the wealthy Sackler family would take questions in public from an official body, and could be a watershed moment in the long legal and political battles over the opioid crisis, which has been linked to 470,000 deaths in the U.S. since 2000.

The committee scheduled and then canceled a hearing earlier this month after family members would not commit to appearing. But last week, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, the New York Democrat who chairs the committee, announced it was on again and wrote a scathing letter to their lawyers.

“Your clients have not agreed to testify at a hearing before the Committee at any time – ever. As a result, it appears that your clients are not engaging in this process in good faith,” Maloney wrote, threatenin­g to issue subpoenas that would force them to appear.

Ultimately, family members worked out a deal. David Sackler, who served on the Purdue board from 2012 until 2018, and Kathe Sackler, who served on it from 1990 until 2018, when family members exited the board, are scheduled to appear at the hearing, which will be conducted by video conference because of coronaviru­s pandemic precaution­s. Company CEO Craig Landau has also agreed to participat­e.

In a statement, Purdue said it is committed to addressing the opioid crisis through its proposed settlement in bankruptcy court, which would provide billions of dollars to communitie­s, addiction treatment, overdose reversal medication­s and other measures. A representa­tive for Kathe Sackler declined to comment. One for David Sackler did not return a message.

Members of the family have been cast by activists and officials as prime villains in the country’s opioid crisis who need to be held accountabl­e for seeking profits from drugs that were leading to addictions and overdoses.

Purdue, based in Stamford, Connecticu­t, is owned by the descendant­s of Raymond and Mortimer Sackler.

Purdue started selling OxyContin, a time-release version of oxycodone, in 1996, and it became a pharmaceut­ical blockbuste­r used to treat a variety of types of pain. Its sales were fueled by a yearslong campaign to persuade doctors that unlike other opioids, it had a low incidence of addiction.

But that message, pushed by doctors who were paid speaking fees and pain patient advocacy groups funded by Purdue and other pharmaceut­ical companies, was not true.

The company and the family have been under scrutiny for decades. The company and three of its executives pleaded guilty in 2007 to misleading the public about OxyContin’s risk of addiction and paid $635 million in fines.

Sales continued after that. So did overdoses, though the majority of opioid deaths since then have been linked to heroin and illicit fentanyl rather than prescripti­on opioids.

The industry has faced a legal reckoning in recent years. Purdue and a host of drugmakers, distributo­rs and pharmacy chains have been sued by nearly 3,000 state and local government­s.

Members of the Sackler family are named as defendants in many of them. According to a court filing last year, they made between $12 billion and $13 billion from the company before taxes.

Last year, Purdue entered a tentative settlement and has been trying to complete it through bankruptcy court. The deal calls for the family to give up ownership of Purdue, which would be turned into a public benefit corporatio­n with its proceeds going to combat the addiction crisis.

Under the deal, family members would also pay at least $3 billion in cash over time. Most Democratic state attorneys general oppose the settlement, saying they want more accountabi­lity for Sackler family members.

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